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Tour de France 2025: the wind from the sea and the storm of riders

Tour de France 2025: the wind from the sea and the storm of riders
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In a stage between Valenciennes and Dunkirk, this Monday, July 7, where everyone was fearing the echelons, the wind, which hit the peloton squarely in the face, weighed heavily on the race and caused numerous falls.
Frenchman Emilien Jeannière crosses the finish line patched up after being caught in the crash in Dunkirk on Monday. (Marco Bertorello/AFP)

What can you predict in this land where the wind is a surprise bag? It turns into a squeaker when you want to hoist the sails and snaps its big jaw at you when you're not expecting a squall. On Saturday, at the start in Lille , it had invited itself into the peloton and Jonas Vingegaard's Visma Lease a Bike had taken advantage of it to dislocate it under its influence. An unplanned pitfall. This Monday, July 7, the wind rose up, in a sky soiled with clouds but without the downpour experienced the day before. Gusts right in the face, therefore, annihilating any desires – the bracing of a pack of riders leaves you warm. Instead of biting their nails, the riders remained huddled together as if on a school trip. The wind held back its chaos. It burst forth differently.

A long-time rider with a loose tongue, when asked to describe the smooth, "round" pedal stroke required for racing in strong winds, went off the rails. He mused: if today's riders, who bomb past 70 km/h, used the gears of his time, "they'd be spinning their legs around their necks." And that's exactly what the stage, which started in Valenciennes,

Libération

Libération

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